I am currently waging a silent war on the ferals. It is their habit to rock up mob handed about 8.30 am to hoover up any dropped seed from the feeders. As I have previously stated a few of them try to get seed directly from the feeders and in doing so prevent the smaller birds getting their breakfast. It goes something like this:-
8.30 approx they arrive
8.31 the first one gets onto the hanging feeder
8.31 and a bit I scare them off by rattling the catch on my patio door
8.34 they return.......
and so it goes on. After the initial arrival a few drift off after each scare leaving me with a determined gang of 8 or so who keep returning ad nauseum.
Eventually even they get fed up a fly off in search of greener pastures. It is usually getting near 10 am by then
12.30 The whole cycle starts again...........

My pesky ferals were very determined today. I lost count of the number of time I frightened them off only for them to fly round in a big circular course and return to the chateau roof. From their lofty viewpoint they sit looking down waiting for me to disappear indoors when they can return to their pillaging .

They're very bold, aren't they ?!?!?! When I can be bothered I sneak outside and bang the scary stick against the guttering (bungalow) - they fly off and return in a matter of minutes .
I theorise that they're used to humans because they hail from the town centre where they hardly bother to move out of the way, so one 'shoo shoo' doesn't impinge too much .

My ferals came close to driving me to distraction today . It seems no amount of shooing off by myself was enough to deter them . My problem is that I give them free reign to feed off the ground and only chase them off when one or more get on the hanging feeders. They can't seem to grasp that the hanging feeders are out of bounds. I have looked on the interweb and no-one(it seems) are making signs that pigeons can read and understand There is a fortune waiting for the first person with that business.